T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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277.1 | "I was frightened out of ..." | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Wed Jan 07 1987 16:39 | 3 |
| "Thin intrapersonally"? Is this a new way to diet? :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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277.3 | what's cause, and what's effect? | EXCELL::SHARP | Don Sharp, Digital Telecommunications | Thu Jan 08 1987 08:13 | 10 |
| I wonder how many of the control group had any kind of personalitly
disorder. This report doesn't say. I also wonder how many of the control
group were gay or bisexual. Finding 2 bisexuals out of a sample of 12
doesn't strike me as statistically significant. In fact, out of a sample of
only 36 I wonder how you can do any worthwhile statistical analysis.
Being an unemployed artist with an unsettled marriage would be enough to
give ME nightmares! This finding doesn't surprise me any.
Don.
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277.4 | for that matter, what's a nightmare? | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu Jan 08 1987 09:07 | 48 |
| I find myself also wondering about what his definition of "nightmare"
is. Does he consider it only a dream that frightens, or do dreams
that bring up other disturbing emotions (grief, anger, anxiety,
etc.) also qualify?
I tend to be a good "recaller" and generally have about 1 dream
a month that leaves a lingering distrubing emotion. (And yes, for
those of you who are physiologically interested, they tend to occur
during the menses.) I rarely have any dreams any more that simply
frighten. Does this mean I have no nightmares? Those of you who
are more knowledgable about textbook psychology can perhaps enlighten
me on this point.
I do tend to find that the dreams that leave me with disturbing
emotional aftertastes are good signals that a previously hidden
conflict is surfacing.
Example: one night I dreamt of being caught in a tidal wave. I
was in a house and watched in fascination as the windows became
covered with water, felt the house lift up and begin floating,
then found myself in the water. My main feeling was a sort of
heightened aliveness, the sort of thing risk-takers say they feel
when combatting a potentially life-threatening situation in their
favorite hobby (racing, sky-diving, rock-climbing, etc.)
It was easy to trace where this had come from. I'd read a story
of just such a survivor of a tidal wave, dreamt the same things she
described, including the floating house. But why did my inner self
pick up on that story so strongly?
During morning coffee I broke down as Dave casually asked me my
plans for that day. It felt at the time like I had impossible
tasks and I was feeling overwhelmed. I sobbed for about a half an
hour, then dried out and went to work, feeling much better able to
cope with the tasks and my reactions to them. It was on the way to
work that the connection between the dream and my feelings that had
surfaced became clear.
Because of the threatening scenes in the dream, some might call
that a nightmare. But my reaction was not fright--does that mean
that it was therefore not one? (And would the subsequent acknowledgement
and resolution of the conflict indicate a "strongly formed ego"
to personality researchers, or would having the dream at all mean
that I am supposed to have ego formation problems?)
Interesting questions . . .
Marcia
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277.5 | Trying to stop nightmares | ORION::HERBERT | What a long strange trip its been! | Fri May 01 1987 13:16 | 8 |
| I recently made a goal of stopping my nightmares which had become a part
of my life. Right about that time, all hell broke loose in my awakened
life. I experienced fear and anxiety like never before...but my dreams
were quite calm. I'm wondering if there's a connection. Could I have
summoned up my fears to deal with face to face in my awake state in an
effort to get rid of them once and for all?
Jerri
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277.6 | RE: .5 -- In a word Yes, you could have. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri May 01 1987 14:07 | 1 |
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277.7 | I know I have | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon May 04 1987 11:27 | 11 |
| I have had that type of thing happen to me, too. Not every nightmare
I've ever had was of the type that this happened--some were related
to horrific books I read, or bad digestion. But the themes that
have recurred over the years have generally been powerful "hidden
agendas". Those agendas, when I've worked on them consciously,
have then proceeded to disappear from the dreams.
Gee, and I thought I was the only one who had an inverse relationship
between the state of my outer life and the state of the inner!
Marcia
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277.9 | SPEAKING OF NIGHTMARES | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Wed May 06 1987 13:37 | 27 |
277.10 | Gee . . . | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon May 11 1987 14:07 | 43 |
| Re: .9
Hmm. Perhaps you might be better off consciously visualising that
the lovely visions of your dreams become part of your waking reality?
This is said half in jest. But the other half of the story, that
I have found is true for me, is that the inverse relationship of
dreams to waking life is a protective mechanism for me. I read
a lovely story once of an orphaned child from one of the Asian
countries, who was brought to America by a foster parent. In the
interview with the foster mother, she expressed great happiness
because her new child was beginning to get angry about things.
She believed this was a sign of health, and a gauge of the safety
he now felt in his new home. When your life is in real danger,
as his had been, it isn't good for physical survival to allow your
emotions full play.
Perhaps it wasn't a good idea to try to get rid of your good dreams
in an effort to make your outside reality better. When I've had
problems dealing with difficult life circumstances, those circum-
stances resolved themselves in their own time and their own way,
without any regard for my wishes. During the time that my father
was dying, for instance, I also had wonderful dreams on all sorts
of subjects. I don't really think that stopping those dreams would
have reversed his illness and brought him back to life; they _did_
provide me with a valuable safety valve that buoyed me through the
months of consciously felt fear, guilt and depression. I kind of
think that our minds, resilient things that they are, seek a balance
to keep us mostly sane. These compensation mechanisms, like having
wonderful dreams during bad times, may just keep you going.
I don't know what to tell you on how to get your nice dreams back.
I never tried to get rid of a pattern like that, so I feel helpless
to think how to help you reconstruct it again. Sorry I'm not of
any more help; perhaps there are some places you could seek some?
I remember once taking symptom suppressants for a physical illness
that finally exploded when it took over, along with sensitivity
reactions to the medications I'd been trying to keep it down with.
When that happened I admitted defeat, also admitted that I'd loused
up and needed a little expert help to put me back together again.
My doctor and I did that just fine.
Marcia
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277.11 | Positive thinking when you can't | ORION::HERBERT | What a long strange trip its been! | Mon May 11 1987 14:51 | 22 |
| Re: .9
This is just a suggestion...and maybe just A STEP in the right
direction. It won't solve things permanently because I think
only you can do that with each new day. But a step at a time
is okay, I've learned. Five steps of happiness and peace are
better than trying to figure out how to run from point "A" to
point "B".
So, you might want to try this...it works very well for me.
Tell yourself (several times if possible) that things are going
to start going better whether you believe they will or not.
You can change the wording to focus on a particular goal, but
the important part is "whether I believe it will or not."
When I have been fighting the same battle for a lengthy period
of time, sometimes it's hard to believe that things could ever
change...so saying positive thoughts is useless, because I think
they are useless. The above method has helped me get around
that. Hope it helps you too.
Jerri
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